Pearl Farming

How Does a Pearl Form? Does it come from a Grain of Sand?

Contrary to popular myth, a pearl does not form from of a grain of sand. In truth, a natural pearl forms when a foreign body - such as a tiny parasite - lodges itself in the soft body of an oyster.

The oyster attempts to protect itself by secreting pearl nacre, a smooth crystalline substance that surrounds and ultimately encases the object. As layer upon layer of pearl nacre is added, from the size of a grain of sand on up, until the object becomes larger and larger - the result is a pearl!

Natural pearls found "in the wild" - those for which the irritant finds its way into the oyster's shell solely by acts of nature - are extremely rare now, due to ocean pollution and too much pearl harvesting. When found, natural pearls are usually heirloom pieces commanding extraordinarily high prices.

Pearl Cultivation on Pearl Farms

A little human intervention in the form of pearl farming, or pearl cultivation, has enabled a more controlled method of pearl formation.

The rise of the commercial pearl farm has given us cultured pearls. Cultured pearls are formed when a pearl technician inserts a particle called a bead nucleus (usually a small round piece of shell) into an oyster.

Oysters are particularly sensitive creatures, and only about 20% of the pearl cultivation done on pearl farms results in marketable pearls (for example, Anandia Pearls only sells pearls taken from the top 1 - 2% of production.)

The skill of the pearl technician is reflected in the quality and quantity of pearls produced by pearl cultivation - the painstaking procedure of implanting the nucleus requires talent and precision.

Depending on the health and age of an oyster, it may undergo cultivation up to three times before the pearl farm lets the oyster "out to pasture" to live out its days and produce pearl spat, or baby oysters.